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Tim Sanger

Football

Bison, Colgate Meet for First Time Saturday in FCS Quarterfinal on ESPN

Live Stats | Live Audio
NDSU Notes (PDF)  | Colgate Notes (PDF) | MVFC Notes | FCS Bracket

THIS WEEK: No. 1-ranked North Dakota State (12-0) hosts Patriot League champion Colgate (10-1) in the quarterfinals of the NCAA Division I Football Championship on Saturday, Dec. 8. Game time is 11 a.m. at Gate City Bank Field at the Fargodome (18,700).
 
TELEVISION: ESPN live coverage begins at 11 a.m. with Kevin Brown (play-by-play), DJ Shockley (analyst) and Cole Cubelic (sideline). NDSU is 23-2 in 25 previous appearances on national television as a Division I program.
 
RADIO: Coverage begins at 10:30 a.m. on the Peterson Farms Seed Bison Radio Network with third-year NDSU play-by-play voice Jeff Culhane joined by NDSU and Buffalo Bills hall of famer Phil Hansen and NDSU sideline reporter Jeremy Jorgenson. Extended coverage locally on 107.9 The Fox, Bison 1660 and 92.7 FM includes "Bison Tailgate" from 7:30-8:30 a.m. with Brad Jones, "Bison Game Day" from 8:30-10:30 a.m. and "Bison Hotline" for two hours following the network broadcast with hosts Keith Brake, Chris Hanson and former NDSU defensive end Cole Jirik.
 
ONLINE: NDSU All Access offers free audio streaming on GoBison.com/allaccess and the NDSU Athletics mobile app. Live stats are available on NCAA.com. Follow @NDSUfootball on Twitter for game updates.
 
TICKETS: Season ticket holders have until 5 p.m. Tuesday to renew their same seats for the game. Unclaimed season tickets go on sale to the public at 7 a.m. Wednesday ONLINE ONLY at GoBison.com/tickets. NDSU student tickets, limit 1 per valid student ID, are $6 and will be on sale Monday and Tuesday from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. in the Memorial Union and at the Bison Ticket Office in the south lobby of the Sanford Health Athletic Complex.
 
TAILGATING: Reserved tailgating pass holders have until 5 p.m. Tuesday to renew their passes for the game. Unclaimed reserved tailgating passes go on sale to the public at 8 a.m. Wednesday at the Bison Ticket Office in the south lobby of the Sanford Health Athletic Complex or by calling 701-231-6172 or 701-231-5990.
 
THE SERIES: This is the first meeting between North Dakota State and Colgate. NDSU is 2-0 against the Patriot League with home wins in the 2011 season-opener over Lafayette (42-6) and the 2011 FCS quarterfinal over Lehigh (24-0). Colgate is 1-2 against the Missouri Valley Football Conference with a playoff road loss in 1999 to Illinois State (56-13) and a playoff home win in 2003 over Western Illinois (28-27). The Raiders lost 31-21 at South Dakota in a 2012 regular-season game.
 
HOME FIELD ADVANTAGE: North Dakota State is the No. 1 overall seed for the FCS playoffs and would host through the semifinal round for the eighth straight year should the Bison advance. The winner of this week's game will face fourth-seeded Kennesaw State or fifth-seeded South Dakota State in next week's semifinal round.
 
BISON RUN PAST MONTANA STATE IN SECOND ROUND: North Dakota State rushed for 407 yards and scored on its first six possessions to beat Montana State 52-10 in the second round of the FCS playoffs. Lance Dunn carried 11 times for 127 yards and an NDSU postseason record-tying four touchdowns, Bruce Anderson went 13 times for 118 yards and one TD, and Ty Brooks had six carries for 103 yards and a score. Montana State connected on a 71-yard pass to the NDSU 4 on the game's first offensive play but couldn't get in the end zone. James Hendricks broke up a third-down pass in the end zone and the Bison forced a 24-yard field goal after an MSU false start penalty. The Bobcats got only three more first downs before halftime and went 0-for-7 on third-down conversions while the Bison opened a 35-3 halftime lead. NDSU linebacker Jabril Cox made a game-high 10 tackles, Dan Marlette added eight stops, cornerback Marquise Bridges made his second interception of the year, and Michael Tutsie blocked a punt for NDSU.
 
THREE-HEADED MONSTER: NDSU averaged 9.2 yards per carry against Montana State and had three 100-yard rushers for the first time since 1996 when Reggie Scott (170), Kevin Feeney (145) and Jake Morris (109) did it against Minnesota State Mankato. Dunn scored on runs of 1, 11, 1 and 46 yards all in the first half, tying the NDSU postseason mark of four rushing TDs set by DJ McNorton in the 2010 second round playoff game at Montana State. NDSU's seven total rushing TDs tied a school postseason record set in 1988 against Augustana (S.D.).
 
NDSU SAAC TOY DRIVE CONTINUES: The NDSU Student-Athlete Advisory Council's fourth annual toy drive continues this week. SAAC members will be collecting new, unwrapped toys and cash for donation to the Ronald McDonald House of the Red River Valley. Donations will be accepted in the tailgating lots and west entrance prior to Saturday's football game and also at Friday's indoor track and field meet at 1 p.m. and Saturday's 7 p.m. men's basketball game vs. Eastern Washington. Online donations may be made to @NDSU-SAAC using the Venmo mobile app.
 
BISON OFFENSE MEETS TOP DEFENSE: North Dakota State's offense is on a school record-setting pace of 42.1 points per game, up from last year's 38.7 that ended in tying the 2013 NDSU record of 581 points scored over 15 games. NDSU has scored 505 points and its 69 touchdowns are just 10 shy of the school record set in 2013 and 2017. The Bison, who have outscored their last three opponents by an average of 55-11 while rushing for an average of 335.7 yards and 15 TDs, will face the No. 1-ranked defense in FCS this year. Colgate has allowed just nine total touchdowns in 11 games, went 29 quarters without allowing a TD, and posted five shutouts in the regular season. The Raiders allowed a season-high 392 total yards against James Madison in last week's 23-20 home win.
 
CAMPBELL TROPHY TUESDAY NIGHT: North Dakota State quarterback Easton Stick a finalist for the William V. Campbell Trophy, which is presented annually to the top scholar-athlete in all of college football. The winner will be announced at the National Football Foundation awards dinner in New York on Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. Central on ESPN3. Stick will be represented by his parents, Mike and Shelly Stick, along with NDSU athletic director Matt Larsen and deputy athletic director Todd Phelps. Stick is the first Campbell Trophy finalist from NDSU and has already earned an $18,000 postgraduate scholarship as one of the 13 finalists in the NFF National Scholar-Athlete Class. The Campbell Trophy winner will have his scholarship award increased to $25,000.
 
STICK AMONG TOP 3 FOR WALTER PAYTON AWARD: North Dakota State quarterback Easton Stick is one of the top three finalists for the STATS FCS Walter Payton Award, which goes to the FCS Offensive Player of the Year and will be presented Jan. 4 in Frisco, Texas. Stick joins Kennesaw State quarterback Chandler Burks and Samford quarterback Devlin Hodges as the top three vote-getters of the 25 finalists. All three were named Offensive Player of the Year in their respective conferences and are graduates working on master's degrees.
 
NATIONAL AWARD FINALISTS: North Dakota State head coach Chris Klieman is a finalist for the STATS FCS Eddie Robinson Award, presented annually to the top head coach in the NCAA Football Championship Subdivision. Quarterback Easton Stick is one of 25 finalists for the Walter Payton Award, presented to the FCS offensive player of the year, and safety Robbie Grimsley and linebacker Jabril Cox are finalists for the Buck Buchanan Award for defensive player of the year.
 
STICK, COX TAKE TOP LEAGUE HONORS: Quarterback Easton Stick was named Offensive Player of the Year and linebacker Jabril Cox was named Defensive Player of the Year in the Missouri Valley Football Conference by a vote of the league's media, head coaches and sports information directors. Stick is the second NDSU player to earn the league's top offensive honor along with 2013 quarterback Brock Jensen, and Cox is the third NDSU player to be selected on defense behind 2012 cornerback Marcus Williams and 2014 defensive end Kyle Emanuel. This is the seventh time in conference history that one team has claimed both the offensive and defensive players of the year, and the first time since 2010 when Western Illinois QB Matt Barr and LB Kyle Glazier were selected.
 
15 ALL-CONFERENCE PICKS: North Dakota State led all schools with 15 All-Missouri Valley Football Conference picks including nine first team and six second team. Darrius Shepherd was a first-team selection at both wide receiver and return specialist, just the second offensive player in league history to earn dual first-team honors. Other first team picks were QB Easton Stick, LB Jabril Cox, OL Tanner Volson and Zack Johnson, DE Greg Menard, S Robbie Grimsley and P Garret Wegner. Second-team honors went to RB Bruce Anderson and Lance Dunn, FB Brock Robbins, TE Ben Ellefson, OL Dillon Radunz and S James Hendricks. In addition, redshirt freshman DE Spencer Waege was named to the MVFC All-Newcomer Team and was third in the voting for Newcomer of the Year behind quarterbacks Ryan Boyle from Indiana State and Brady Davis from Illinois State.
 
ACADEMIC HONORS: Defensive end Greg Menard and quarterback Easton Stick were voted to the Google Cloud Academic All-District 6 first team by the College Sports Information Directors of America. Menard and Stick advance to the national ballot for Academic All-America® honors to be announced in December. Nominees must have a 3.30 cumulative grade-point average and be starters or significant contributors with at least sophomore academic and athletic standing. Menard has a 3.85 GPA in civil engineering and Stick, currently in the master's of business administration program, graduated with a 3.92 GPA in sport management. Menard and Stick were named to the MVFC All-Academic first team along with tight end Ben Ellefson, and safety Robbie Grimsley and wide receiver Darrius Shepherd made the second team.
 
NINTH STRAIGHT QUARTERFINAL: North Dakota State is in the FCS quarterfinals for the ninth straight season, the longest streak in FCS history. NDSU also has a record seven-straight FCS semifinal appearances. Only three teams have made the FCS semifinals at least eight times: Georgia Southern (13), Montana (11) and Youngstown State (8).
        Consecutive FCS Quarterfinal Appearances
        9 – North Dakota State, 2010-2018
        6 – Appalachian State, 2005-2010
        6 – Marshall, 1991-1996
        6 – Georgia Southern, 1985-1990
        6 – Georgia Southern, 1997-2002

        Consecutve FCS Semifinal Appearances
        7 - North Dakota State, 2011-2017
        6 - Marshall, 1991-1996
        5 - Georgia Southern, 1998-2002
        4 - Eastern Kentucky, 1979-1982
        4 - Youngstown State, 1991-1994
 
10-WIN MARK: North Dakota State has reached the 10-win mark for the eighth straight season. NDSU's eight 10-win seasons this decade are the most in FCS ahead of Sam Houston State (6), Eastern Washington (5), Jacksonville State (4), Wofford (3) and Lehigh (3).
 
LARGEST SENIOR CLASS: NDSU has 24 seniors playing their final season, the largest outgoing class in program history topping the 23 who played their final game in 2013. This year's class includes 20 fifth-year seniors who were part of Chris Klieman's first recruiting class as NDSU head coach in 2014, three who played as true freshmen in 2015—safety Robbie Grimsley, running back Bruce Anderson and kicker Cam Pedersen. Since 2015, the Bison are 51-5 overall including 32-3 at home and 29-3 in the Missouri Valley Football Conference with four league titles. NDSU won national championships in 2015 and 2017 and has an 11-1 record in the FCS playoffs.
 
UNBEATEN SEASONS: Eleven teams have gone unbeaten in Missouri Valley Football Conference games since 1985, and only North Dakota State (2013 and 2018) and Southern Illinois (2009) have done it with an eight-game conference schedule. There have been 14 undefeated NDSU teams since 1894 with the last being the 2013 national champions (15-0). Additionally, Bison teams went unbeaten in the regular season before postseason losses in 1967 (Pecan Bowl) and 1982 (Division II semifinal). NDSU is the only team in MVFC history to win its first seven overall games in back-to-back years, and the Bison have done it twice in 2013 (15-0), 2014 (9-0), 2017 (8-0) and 2018 (10-0).
 
STICK SECOND ON FCS QUARTERBACK WINS LIST: North Dakota State's Easton Stick has a 46-3 record as starting quarterback, the second most wins in FCS history behind NDSU's Brock Jensen, who went 47-5 as a starter with 48 total wins from 2010-13.
        Most Wins by FCS Quarterbacks
        48 - Brock Jensen, North Dakota State (2010-13)
        46 - Easton Stick, North Dakota State (2015-18)
        43 - Armanti Edwards, Appalachian State (2006-09)
        42 - J.R. Revere, Georgia Southern (1998-01)
        41 - Eric Ward, Richmond (2006-09)
 
STICK IN THE RECORD BOOKS: Quarterback Easton Stick has broken NDSU career records for total offense (10,372; 3rd in MVFC history), passing touchdowns (82; 2nd in MVFC history) and total touchdowns (117). He remains second on the NDSU career lists for passing attempts, completions and yards. Stick is also second in MVFC history for quarterback rushing yards (2,251) and TDs (35) behind Missouri State's DeAndre Smith (2,276 yards and 36 TDs from 1987-90).

PEDERSEN BREAKS PAT, SCORING RECORDS: NDSU's Cam Pedersen has converted 86 straight PAT attempts and owns the Missouri Valley Football Conference and NDSU records for career PATs made (246). Pedersen also has the NDSU record for points by kick (378), which is the most points among all active FCS players, sixth all-time among FCS kickers, fourth in MVFC history, and third all-time at NDSU. He kicked his 44th career field goal against Montana State and ranks third at NDSU in career field goals made behind Adam Keller (56, 2011-14) and Shawn Bibeau (51, 2006-09).
 
LONGEST WINNING STREAKS: North Dakota State owns the longest active winning streak in the FCS at 18 games, which is second longest in Missouri Valley Football Conference history behind the 33-game Bison winning streak from 2012 to 2014. Kennesaw State is second with an 11-game winning streak. UCF (25) and Alabama (15) have the two longest active winning streaks in FBS. NDSU's 17-game home winning streak is second longest in the FCS behind San Diego's 21.
 
GRIMSLEY AMONG NDSU CAREER LEADERS: Senior Robbie Grimsley's 16 career interceptions rank first among FCS active players and are tied for second all-time at NDSU behind Marcus Williams (21 from 2010-13) with Steve Krumrei (16 from 1967-69) and Tre Dempsey (16 from 2014-17). Grimsley also ranks sixth at NDSU with 149 solo tackles.
 
MENARD FOURTH IN CAREER SACKS: Defensive end Greg Menard is fourth in career sacks at NDSU with 37, four shy of the school record 41 total sacks held by Jerry Dahl (1973-74), Phil Hansen (1987-90) and Kyle Emanuel (2011-14). Menard is the FCS active career leader with 31.5 sacks counting solo and assisted sacks as defined by the NCAA.
 
NDSU THIRD IN FCS IN PICKS: North Dakota State is tied for third in FCS with a conference-best 19 interceptions this year. Safety Robbie Grimsley has five picks and linebacker Jabril Cox has four, one shy of the Bison record for interceptions by a linebacker (5) by Rick Budde in 1976.
 
TURNOVER MARGIN LEADERS: NDSU's plus-16 turnover margin is tied for third in the FCS behind Southeast Missouri State (+24) and Dartmouth (+18). NDSU has scored a conference-best 108 points off 24 opponent turnovers.
 
BISON AMONG PUNT LEADERS: NDSU ranks fifth in FCS averaging 17.05 yards per punt return with return specialist Darrius Shepherd ranked fourth in FCS with an average of 17.4 yards per return. Shepherd's career punt return average of 13.66 is fifth best in school history. Meanwhile, punter Garret Wegner ranks seventh in FCS and is first in the league with a 43.7 punting average.
 
SHEPHERD THIRD IN CAREER CATCHES, YARDS: Senior wide receiver Darrius Shepherd is ranked third all-time at NDSU in pass receptions and yards. Shepherd has 177 receptions behind Zach Vraa (195 from 2011-15) and Kole Heckendorf (178 from 2005-08) and Shepherd's 2,622 yards are third behind Vraa (2,957) and Heckendorf (2,732). Shepherd is tied with Heckendorf for seventh in career TD catches with 17 behind Eric Nelson (18 from 1997-00).
 
ACTIVE 2,000-YARD RUSHERS: North Dakota State is the only FCS team in the nation with three active 2,000-yard rushers. Lance Dunn (2,954) is ninth on NDSU's all-time rushing list, Bruce Anderson has 2,693 yards and Easton Stick (2,251) needs just 26 yards to break the conference record for rushing yards by a quarterback.
        MVFC Career Rushing Yards by QB
        2,276 - DeAndre Smith, Missouri State (1987-90)
        2,251 - Easton Stick, North Dakota State (2015-18)
        2,176 - Tirrell Rennie, Northern Iowa (2010-11)
        1,880 - Jeff Ryan, Youngstown State (1998-01)

        NDSU Career Rushing Yards by QB
        3,313 - Chris Simdorn (1987-90)
        2,945 - Jeff Bentrim (1983-86)
        2,473 - Kevin Feeney (1995-98)
        2,264 - Mark Speral (1977-80)
        2,248 - Easton Stick (2015-18)
 
RED ZONE SUCCESS: North Dakota State leads the FCS in red zone defense this year allowing opponents inside the 20-yard line only 21 times with six touchdowns and four field goals. The Bison also are fourth nationally in red zone offense scoring on 46 of 50 chances with 41 TDs.
 
PLAYERS OF THE WEEK: North Dakota State had eight players earn 11 Player of the Week awards in the Missouri Valley Football Conference this year.
        —Bruce Anderson, Offense (9/2)..Rushed 11 times for a career-high 185 yards averaging 16.8 yards per carry with two touchdowns against Cal Poly...Scored on runs of 10 and 86 yards...Finished with 239 all-purpose yards including kickoff returns of 23 and 24 yards and one reception.
        —Tanner Volson, Offensive Line (9/4, 10/29)...Four knockdowns with zero sacks or hurries in each of the wins over Cal Poly and South Dakota...Graded 100% on assignment both games...NDSU rushed for 458 yards and seven TDs averaging 10.2 yards per carry vs. Cal Poly...Season-high 560 yards of total offense at USD with five rushing TDs and 8.0 yards per carry.
        —Easton Stick, Offense (9/23, 10/7, 11/11)...Accounted for 321 yards of total offense and four TDs in the win over Delaware...Went 17 of 26 passing for 280 yards and rushed five times for 41 yards and two TDs...Completed nine passes for 179 yards and four TDs and ran for two TDs in the comeback win at Northern Iowa...School record-tying five TD passes all in the first half of win at Missouri State.
        —Dillon Radunz, Offensive Line (9/24)...Helped lead NDSU to 527 yards of offense against Delaware's No. 9-ranked defense...Coaching grade of 97% assignment and 82% technique with two explosive blocks...Team allowed zero sacks for the third straight week.
        —Garret Wegner, Special Teams (10/1)...Averaged 47.4 yards on five punts with three inside the 20 against South Dakota State...Booted a 49-yard punt out-of-bounds at the SDSU 2 with just 1:15 left before halftime...Launched a key 54-yarder to the SDSU 7 that led to a three-and-out on SDSU's final offensive possession.
        —James Hendricks, Defensive (10/14)...Two interceptions, one pass breakup and four tackles in the win at Western Illinois as the Bison forced five turnovers.
        —Darrius Shepherd, Special Teams (10/21)...Totaled 236 all-purpose yards against Illinois State including six catches for 126 yards and two punt returns for 103 yards...Had receptions of 55 and 44 yards on NDSU's first two drives and a 69-yard punt return to start the third quarter.
        —Zack Johnson, Offensive Line (11/19)...Played 57 of 70 snaps with six knockdowns and zero sacks or hurries allowed against Southern Illinois...Led the Bison with an 86% technique grade and was 100% on assignment...NDSU put up a season-high 663 yards in the 65-17 win, the most yards and points by the Bison in an MVFC game.
 
EIGHT STRAIGHT CONFERENCE TITLES: NDSU won its eighth consecutive Missouri Valley Football Conference championship, topping the league record seven straight by Northern Iowa in the early 1990s. NDSU won outright MVFC titles in 2012, 2013, 2017 and 2018. North Dakota State has won 35 football conference championships including 26 in the North Central Conference (last in 1994) and one in the Great West Football Conference (2006).
        Most Consecutive Conference Titles in Division I Football
        14 - Oklahoma (Big 8, 1946-59)
        12 - Montana (Big Sky, 1998-09)
        10 - BYU (WAC, 1976-85)
        9 - Florida State (ACC, 1992-00)
        8 - Nebraska (Big 8, 1910-17)
        8 - North Dakota State (MVFC, 2011-18)
 
14-TIME NATIONAL CHAMPIONS: North Dakota State won its 14th football national championship in 2017. NDSU claimed three College Division national championships in 1965, 1968 and 1969, five Division II titles in 1983, 1985, 1986, 1988 and 1990, and was the first team in college football history to win five straight national titles with FCS crowns in 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014 and 2015.
 
BISON AT HOME: NDSU is 72-6 at home since 2010 including a 22-1 mark in the FCS playoffs. The Bison have won 63 of the last 65 home games over non-conference opponents with its last home loss coming in the 2016 semifinals to James Madison. NDSU is 22-4 at home all-time against FCS Top 10 teams. North Dakota State ranks fifth in the FCS this year with an average home attendance of 18,296.
 
DECADE LEADER:  North Dakota State's 118 wins this decade are more than any other program in college football. NDSU is 109-8 since the beginning of 2011, the first of five national championship seasons. North Dakota State holds the distinction of being the winningest Division II program of the 1980s, going 103-20-2 from 1980-89 with four national titles in that span.
        FCS Winningest Teams, 2010s (by wins)
        118 - North Dakota State (118-13)
        92 - Sam Houston State (92-32)
        88 - Eastern Washington (88-30)
        85 - Jacksonville State (85-28)
        82 - James Madison (82-33)

        FCS Winningest Teams, 2010s (by pct.)
        .901 - North Dakota State (118-13)
        .778 - Harvard (70-20)
        .752 - Jacksonville State (85-28)
        .746 - Eastern Washington (88-30)
        .742 - Sam Houston State (92-32)
 
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Players Mentioned

Tre Dempsey

#3 Tre Dempsey

FS
5' 10"
Senior
Bruce Anderson

#8 Bruce Anderson

RB
5' 11"
Senior
Marquise Bridges

#9 Marquise Bridges

CB
5' 11"
Junior
Ty Brooks

#28 Ty Brooks

RB
5' 9"
Junior
Jabril Cox

#42 Jabril Cox

LB
6' 3"
Sophomore
Lance Dunn

#10 Lance Dunn

RB
5' 9"
Senior
Ben Ellefson

#82 Ben Ellefson

TE
6' 3"
Junior
Robbie Grimsley

#5 Robbie Grimsley

SS
6' 0"
Senior
James Hendricks

#6 James Hendricks

FS
6' 1"
Junior
Zack Johnson

#68 Zack Johnson

OT
6' 6"
Junior

Players Mentioned

Tre Dempsey

#3 Tre Dempsey

5' 10"
Senior
FS
Bruce Anderson

#8 Bruce Anderson

5' 11"
Senior
RB
Marquise Bridges

#9 Marquise Bridges

5' 11"
Junior
CB
Ty Brooks

#28 Ty Brooks

5' 9"
Junior
RB
Jabril Cox

#42 Jabril Cox

6' 3"
Sophomore
LB
Lance Dunn

#10 Lance Dunn

5' 9"
Senior
RB
Ben Ellefson

#82 Ben Ellefson

6' 3"
Junior
TE
Robbie Grimsley

#5 Robbie Grimsley

6' 0"
Senior
SS
James Hendricks

#6 James Hendricks

6' 1"
Junior
FS
Zack Johnson

#68 Zack Johnson

6' 6"
Junior
OT